The world has ended. What do we do now?
No one knows what the meteor was, or from which far-off star system it originated. All that is known that it blazed across the sky over the cornfields of the Midwest, a brilliant streak of red across a background of stars. The impact crater it left in the badlands of South Dakota made the whole North American continental plate vibrate like the surface of a drum, and caused earthquakes and tsunamis all across the earth.
But it wasn't the meteor that ended the world, but what the meteor carried.
Within a matter of weeks, half the United States was overrun with a strange red vegetation that choked the life from the soil, devouring field and forest and desert as it spread. It was like nothing the earth had ever seen: a forest of red leaves and twisting vines that consumed flesh as if it were an animal. As if it were sentient.
What the forest didn't devour, it corrupted beyond recognition. Within months, North America was covered in choking vines and trees. And with spores borne on the wind, the rest of the world fell into ruin as well.
But the forest had one weakness. For some reason, salt water caused it to wither and die, shriveling up until it crumbled into ash. So, in some of the world's seaside cities, people fought back. Men and women, using tanks of seawater and fire hoses, carved out enclaves of human habitation: tiny pockets of humanity in a world where they had become obsolete.
In what we once called the San Francisco Bay Area, a small community still survives. And here, at the top of a white stone tower that overlooks the life-saving waters of the bay, a lone man broadcasts a solitary radio channel, a single voice in the endless wilderness, going out to no one in particular.
The Age of Humanity is over. The Age of the Blood Forest has begun.
This is Blood Forest Radio.
New episodes of Blood Forest Radio come out every two weeks. It is
written by Ian P. Johnson and Daniel Lindsley, and performed by Ian
P. Johnson. Original music for each episode is written by Tim and
Derek Hamersly. Our logo and website were designed by Sydney Shafer.
All content for Blood Forest Radio is the property of Blood Forest Radio and is served directly from their servers
with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
The world has ended. What do we do now?
No one knows what the meteor was, or from which far-off star system it originated. All that is known that it blazed across the sky over the cornfields of the Midwest, a brilliant streak of red across a background of stars. The impact crater it left in the badlands of South Dakota made the whole North American continental plate vibrate like the surface of a drum, and caused earthquakes and tsunamis all across the earth.
But it wasn't the meteor that ended the world, but what the meteor carried.
Within a matter of weeks, half the United States was overrun with a strange red vegetation that choked the life from the soil, devouring field and forest and desert as it spread. It was like nothing the earth had ever seen: a forest of red leaves and twisting vines that consumed flesh as if it were an animal. As if it were sentient.
What the forest didn't devour, it corrupted beyond recognition. Within months, North America was covered in choking vines and trees. And with spores borne on the wind, the rest of the world fell into ruin as well.
But the forest had one weakness. For some reason, salt water caused it to wither and die, shriveling up until it crumbled into ash. So, in some of the world's seaside cities, people fought back. Men and women, using tanks of seawater and fire hoses, carved out enclaves of human habitation: tiny pockets of humanity in a world where they had become obsolete.
In what we once called the San Francisco Bay Area, a small community still survives. And here, at the top of a white stone tower that overlooks the life-saving waters of the bay, a lone man broadcasts a solitary radio channel, a single voice in the endless wilderness, going out to no one in particular.
The Age of Humanity is over. The Age of the Blood Forest has begun.
This is Blood Forest Radio.
New episodes of Blood Forest Radio come out every two weeks. It is
written by Ian P. Johnson and Daniel Lindsley, and performed by Ian
P. Johnson. Original music for each episode is written by Tim and
Derek Hamersly. Our logo and website were designed by Sydney Shafer.
The world has ended. What do we do now?
No one knows what the meteor was, or from which far-off star system it originated. All that is known that it blazed across the sky over the cornfields of the Midwest, a brilliant streak of red across a background of stars. The impact crater it left in the badlands of South Dakota made the whole North American continental plate vibrate like the surface of a drum, and caused earthquakes and tsunamis all across the earth.
But it wasn't the meteor that ended the world, but what the meteor carried.
Within a matter of weeks, half the United States was overrun with a strange red vegetation that choked the life from the soil, devouring field and forest and desert as it spread. It was like nothing the earth had ever seen: a forest of red leaves and twisting vines that consumed flesh as if it were an animal. As if it were sentient.
What the forest didn't devour, it corrupted beyond recognition. Within months, North America was covered in choking vines and trees. And with spores borne on the wind, the rest of the world fell into ruin as well.
But the forest had one weakness. For some reason, salt water caused it to wither and die, shriveling up until it crumbled into ash. So, in some of the world's seaside cities, people fought back. Men and women, using tanks of seawater and fire hoses, carved out enclaves of human habitation: tiny pockets of humanity in a world where they had become obsolete.
In what we once called the San Francisco Bay Area, a small community still survives. And here, at the top of a white stone tower that overlooks the life-saving waters of the bay, a lone man broadcasts a solitary radio channel, a single voice in the endless wilderness, going out to no one in particular.
The Age of Humanity is over. The Age of the Blood Forest has begun.
This is Blood Forest Radio.
New episodes of Blood Forest Radio come out every two weeks. It is
written by Ian P. Johnson and Daniel Lindsley, and performed by Ian
P. Johnson. Original music for each episode is written by Tim and
Derek Hamersly. Our logo and website were designed by Sydney Shafer.